Communities and Crime
An Enduring American Challenge (Urban Life, Landscape and Policy)
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Narrated by:
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Scot Wilcox
About this listen
Social scientists have long argued over the links between crime and place. The authors of Communities and Crime provide an intellectual history that traces how varying images of community have evolved over time and influenced criminological thinking and criminal justice policy.
The authors outline the major ideas that have shaped the development of theory, research, and policy in the area of communities and crime. Each chapter examines the problem of the community through a defining critical or theoretical lens: the community as social disorganization; as a system of associations; as a symptom of larger structural forces; as a result of criminal subcultures; as a broken window; as crime opportunity; and as a site of resilience.
Focusing on these changing images of community, the empirical adequacy of these images, and how they have resulted in concrete programs to reduce crime, Communities and Crime theorizes about and reflects upon why some neighborhoods produce so much crime. The result is a tour of the dominant theories of place in social science today.
The book is published by Temple University Press. The audiobook is published by University Press Audiobooks.
"Recommended." (Choice)
©2018 Temple University—Of The Commonwealth System of Higher Education (P)2022 Redwood Audiobooks